The 10,000 square-feet center has various gymnastics apparatus, including balance beams, parallel bars, high bars, uneven bars, trampolines, a spring floor, and big inground pits filled with foam blocks for kids to tumble into. Frezza recalled a 60-year-old man who came in wanting to learn a backflip that he could use while skydiving. It helps brain development by increasing blood flow to the brain and giving it a larger learning capacity.?Īdults can also take gymnastics lessons. ‘If they can learn gymnastics at a young age, they will be helped in cognitive learning. ‘Exercise at a young age develops the brain faster,? said Frezza. In the center’s preschool-age classes, students develop motor skills and also, the brain. GOB Gymnastics accepts students as young as 2?-years-old as long as they’re potty-trained. I want to help parents raise confident children with great self-esteem.? ‘The goal of other gymnastics schools is to create a name for themselves by creating great gymnasts,? said Frezza. Part of the Michigan Recreational Gymnastics League, the focus of GOB Gymnastics, says Frezza, is fun? to find out if the kids like the sport, without the pressure. GOB (Groveland-Ortonville-Brandon) Gymnastics will continue at the center. Frezza has coached gymnastics for 34 years. ‘Grips is for highly competitive, determined, dedicated and talented girls,? said Frezza, who has owned the gymnastics center at its current location for six years and has been in business in the area for a total of 13 years. It is planned for the spring and Frezza’s son Garrett, a gymnast as well as full-time instructor and operations manager, will head the program. The new program, planned for spring, will be part of the USA Gymnastics League and is for girls who aspire to achieve high levels, such as an athletic scholarship or the Olympics. The coach and owner of GOB Gymnastics, Dance and Cheerleading will soon be adding Grips Gymnastics to his club located at 142 Harbor Pointe, Ortonville.
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